tv CBS Evening News With Norah O Donnell CBS September 8, 2023 3:30pm-4:01pm PDT
3:30 pm
this has to be one of the most beautiful san francisco traditions, the san francisco botanical gardens have been transformed into a concert hall, the annual flower piano event is back, 12 grand pianos are hidden in the gardens and everyone is invited to sit down and start playing. there will be a mix of scheduled performances throughout the week. i don't think i could probably sit down and start playing chopsticks, i don't think that would go over too well. the cbs evening news is coming up next, and join us tonight for the prime time edition at 8:00 and 9:00, find us weeknights on the new pix+ 44 cable 12 and streaming on the new ♪ ♪ >> norah: tonight, hurricane lee exploding in intensity. we are tracking the rare category 4 storm. where it could pose an extreme
3:31 pm
risk. plus the latest on that scorching heat. here are tonight's headlines. ♪ ♪ the threat from hurricane lee. officials warm the monster storm could unleash deadly rip currents along the east coast. >> you are talking about waves that are off our chart here, over 40 feet high. >> norah: while businesses struggle with the extreme heat. ♪ ♪ >> the philadelphia police officer who shot and killed eddie irizarry has turned himself into police. >> the charges that dial is now facing include murder, involuntary manslaughter, and also assault. >> we will not cover up for power. ♪ ♪ >> norah: breaking news. the prison guard on duty while the convicted killer escaped has been fired. ♪ ♪ new details tonight in the case of former president donald trump selection interference in georgia. why the grand jury wanted to charge u.s. senators, including lindsey graham. ♪ ♪
3:32 pm
millions of tons of plastic end up in the world's oceans every year. we will introduce you to the secret weapon tackling the trash. speak with like a vacuum cleaner for the river. >> it's a good-looking vacuum cleaner. ♪ ♪ >> norah: we talk with oprah about one of life's most enduring questions: how to be happier. >> nevada is the great destroyer. it is the happiness killer. ♪ ♪ >> a few months ago, calvin was in this burger king drive through when he happened to look in his rearview mirror and saw a woman who just seems sad. so calvin did what calvin does. bought her meal. only this time his random act of kindness would not soon be forgotten. >> he is just an amazing man. ♪ ♪ >> norah: good evening, and thank you for joining us on this friday night. we begin with breaking news on hurricane lee, and its potential impact on most of the east coast
3:33 pm
this weekend. lee rapidly intensified from a category 2, doubling and wind speeds in 24 hours and briefly becoming the first category 5 hurricane of the season. whether experts are watching this closely, and they are concerned that storms like lee that gain strength so's quickly are happening more frequently. heavy reeves and hazardous beach conditions are expected to impact much of the east coast, beginning sunday and monday, even while the storm is hundreds of miles out in the atlantic the article also tonight, we are tracking heavy thunderstorms the rumbling across the northeast. in new jersey, roads are flooded and trees are knocked down. chris warren of our partners at the weather channel will lead us off tonight. good evening, chris. >> good evening, norah. hurricane lee rapidly intensified to a category 5 hurricane yesterday. rapid intensification is a 35-mile per our increase in wins
3:34 pm
in 24 hours. lee did 80, more than double that threshold in 24 hours. it is now a category 4 hurricane, which is expected to be the strength over the next several days, maybe down to a 3, it will punctuate, but by the little of next week we will have a much better ideay will go because there are still some options, depending on that dip in the jet stream, this big area of high pressure may go well away from land or much closer. regardless, there is going to be some large waves and some dangerous rip currents at beaches up and down the east coast, and along the east coast for tonight, norah, that threat for storms will continue. the biggest threat will be damaging wins. >> norah: chris, thank you. turning now to philadelphia, where authorities released a new video of a deadly police shooting that sparked outrage in the city. the officer who fired multiple shots at eddie irizarry last month turned himself in today. cbs's jeff pegues is in philadelphia with the new details, and we do want to warn you that the video is hard to
3:35 pm
watch. >> reporter: for the first time, we are seeing police body camera video showing the disturbing moments philadelphia officer mark dial shot and killed 27-year-old eddie irizarry during a traffic stop last month. the incident was initially caught on surveillance camera, showing irizarry driving the wrong way down a one-way street. after the officers arrived, dial, who was riding in the passenger seat... >> show your hands! >> reporter: jumps out of the police cruiser with his gun drawn. five seconds later, he fired six times into the vehicle. >> shots fired, shots fired. >> reporter: irizarry had been placed in the back of the police car. >> get in the car. >> reporter: driven by dial to a area hospital where he later died. today, dial turned himself in. he is facing seven counts, including murder. >> i think that the videos speak for themselves. >> reporter: dial's defense attorney calls the charges appalling. indo world is those acts
3:36 pm
murder. we intend to write this wrong. this decision today puts police officers in payroll. >> reporter: but statements by police immediately after the shooting t said irizarry lungedt supported by the evidence. irizarry's onto says they pushed to get the videos released. what do you think his legacy is going to be? >> that he was very special to us. and it's a shame that it was such a senseless killing. >> reporter: dial posted $50,000 and was released on bail. the other officer involved has not been charged. norah? >> norah: jeff pegues, thank you. now to some new information about that frantic effort to rescue an american researcher trapped more than 3,000 feet below ground in a turkish cave. cbs's chris livesay reports now on what has become an international rescue effort.
3:37 pm
speed to new footage of rescuers and medics working around the clock to stabilize mark dickey, in good spirits ahead of a dramatic rescue, more than 3,00. cavers from around the world have swooped to the rescue, providing life-saving aid to the 40-year-old scientist who, while helping map turkey's third deepest cave, suffered severe gastrointestinal bleeding. >> up. >> reporter: the veteran cave or expressing his gratitude. >> going to need a lot of help to get out of here. >> reporter: measuring more than two empire state building steep, they are splitting the cave into seven parts, each wity in place, starting with a bulgarian team at the bottom, followed by rescuers from croatia, italy, poland, hungary, and finally, turkey. dickey, an experienced spa longer and rescuer himself, will also likely play a pivotal role in his own rescue, says mark dickey's colleague at the national cave rescue commission, greg moore. how tricky is it for him, do you
3:38 pm
think, to not participate too much. >> this is going to be a bit of a combination because he can use his hands, keep from scraping the wall or through a tight passage, he may be able to get through it. i think knowing mark, the biggest risk is he is going to want to go do more than the doctors want them to do. >> reporter: as for when exactly they will be able to move the key to safety, turkey's rescue department says they are waiting for the green light from doctors. once it begins for that operation is expected to take 5-6 days. norah? >> norah: chris livesay, thank you. a prison guard who was on duty when a dangerous fugitive escape from a pennsylvania prison last week has been fired. police say now there have been eight confirmed sightings of danelo cavalcante and t made this brazen breakout nine days ago. officers are investigating a break-in at a business in the search area today to see if it is connected to cavalcante. there is a big development in the investigation into alleged efforts to overturn georgia's 2020 presidential election
3:39 pm
results. today, we learned the original grand jury recommended indictments against 39 people. that is twice as many people that were ultimately charged. cbs's nikole killion reports that group includes senators and lindsey graham and two former senators. >> reporter: according to the unsealed report, the special-purpose grand jury recommended indictments for 21 additional individuals, including former president trump's x national security advisor michael flynn,s lieutenant governor burt jones, former senators kelly loeffler and david perdue, and current south carolina senator lindsey graham. >> i was totally surprised. they never suggested anybody set aside the election. >> reporter: graham was 1 of 75 witnesses subpoenaed over his call to secretary of state senator brad raffensperger, claims the senator asked him to find a way to set aside votes. >> senator graham imply for us to audit the envelopes and throw out the ballots for the highest
3:40 pm
of signature of signatures. >> reporter: graham has denied any wrongdoing. >> it is very clear that there were issues in this election. >> reporter: loeffler, who once called for raffensperger's resignation, said "i make no apologies for serving my state." while the former president has posted the grand jury had zero credibility and wanted to invite anybody who happened to be breathing. >> i don't expect anybody else from that list to be indicted. >> reporter: emory law professor morgan cloud says some of the officials who were not cardinal my charge could be cooperating with the case. >> you get this on some of them may be witnesses that are going to appear at trial. >> reporter: late today, a federal judge rejected a request by former white house chief of staff mark meadows to move his case out of fulton county to federal court. that could have implications on other defense -- defendants, including the former president, who is considering a similar move. norah? >> norah: nikole killion, thank you very much. former house speaker na nancy pelosi made 2024 election news today, nothing she is running to keep her seat in the
3:41 pm
closely divided house. the san francisco democrat, now 83 years old, has served in congress since 1987 and she was the first woman ever to serve the speaker of the house. even after stepping down as the democratic leader, pelosi remains one of the nation's most influential lawmakers. president biden arrived in india today for a weekend of important meetings with world leaders at the g20 summit. the president met privately with prime minister modi, the leaders of russia and china are skipping the summit this year, giving prd other heads of state an opportunity to strengthen ties and focus on economic security, climate change, and other key global issues. but heat dome that smothered much of the country this week is still blanketing texas, with temperatures well into the triple digits. the extreme heat is not only threaten people's health. it is having a major impact on the lone star state's economy. there is cbs's omar villafranca. >> reporter: at kate weiser chocolate outside of dallas,
3:42 pm
triple-digit heat means a meltdown. >> our biggest burden with summer and chocolate is shipping. it is just getting it from point a to point b. >> ready to go. >> how do we keep it safe, how do we keep it cold enough? >> we talked about potentially just shutting down shipping. >> reporter: until they experiment with new packaging. >> they are cold. >> reporter: that could take the heat. >> flat ice sheets. they cover more product, more surface area. >> reporter: key to ensuring customers don't receive a melted mess. >> it can really impact just how much we lose money because, even if we do everything right, something could still melt, and that his loss that we have to then resent to the customer. >> reporter: nearly a quarter of texas businesses say this summer's heat has hurt them. but while some are sweating it out... others are keeping cool, like air conditioner maker trane technologies in tyler, texas. your fabrication runs all day. >> around the clock. >> reporter: what does that tell you about how busy you are?
3:43 pm
>> its consistent demand. >> reporter: plant manager robert rivers says summer is always the busiest season for their 2100 workers. this year's high temperatures brought more business. >> we have seen increased demand and margins that are not typically air-conditioner markets, such as the pacific northwest. >> reporter: temperatures at gsw reach record numbers. also a texas ritual, friday night lights. kickoff has been pushed back 30r cooler temperatures for the players, cheerleaders, and the fans. norah? >> norah: hope they have a good game. omar villafranca, thank you. we know plastic pollution is one of the most serious issues facing the world's oceans, and one young inventor is proposing that the best way to combat the growing problem is starting with rivers. cbs's ben tracy gives us an in-depth look at a high-tech barge that is scooping tonsil plastic from our seas.
3:44 pm
>> it is like a vacuum cleaner for the river. >> it is a good-looking vacuum cleaner. >> reporter: this is interceptor zero zero seven, the not-so-secret agent of trash collection at the mouth of this waterway in los angeles. >> we have prevented 77 tons of trash from flowing into the ocean just this past winter. >> reporter: boyan slat is the 25-year-old founder of eight dutch nonprofit called the ocean cleanup. it is trying to collect 9 90% of floating plastic pollution, including cleaning up the great pacific garbagage patch, which s twice the size of texas. it is now focusing on rivers because it's research shows just 1% of the world's rivers are responsible for 80% of all plastic flowing into the ocean. >> so if we tackle that 1% of rivers, we think we could have a tremendous impact in a relatively short amount of time. >> reporter: he has deployed 11 interceptors, costing as much as $650,000, on rivers around the world, and plans for
3:45 pm
hundreds more. on this river in guatemala, which looks more like a landfill, the device collected 2.5 million pounds of trash in just three weeks.% >> welcome to my super yacht. >> reporter: [laughs] it's very nice. he took us on board the l.a. interceptor, which runs on solar power, and is fully autonomous until it needs to be emptied. they had to do that 15 times this last winter, as trash flowed into the river during powerful storms. these photos show what l.a. county says was a 75% reduction in trash on nearby beaches once the interceptor arrived. >> we want the interceptor to stay here as long as plastic flows through this river and would otherwise end up in the ocean. >> reporter: which means zero zero seven could be on this assignment for a very long time. ben tracy, cbs news, los angeles. >> norah: there is a big settlement after complaints of a defectct in machinines u used tt sleeeep apnea. that's's next. withth your erc c tax refund soso you can i improve your b business
3:46 pm
however r you see fifit. rosie useded part of herer refund to b build an ououtdoor patit. clink!k! dr. marshahall used part of hisis refund to givive his pracactice a facelilift. emily usused part ofof her refund t to buy... i run a wax museumum. let t innovationon refunds helplp you get s started onon your erc c tax refundnd. stopop waiting.. go to innonovationrefufundsm you really got thehe brows. ♪♪ whenen you have e chronic kidney d disease.... ththere are plplaces yoyou'd likeke to be. like herere. anand here. not so mucuch here. if you havave chronicc kidney d disease, farxiga a can help y you keepep living lilife. ♪ farxiga ♪ anand farxiga a reduces the risk o of kidney f failur, which cacan lead to o dialysi. farxiga can cause serious side effects including dedehydratio, urininary tract t or genitalalt infectioions in womemen and m, and lolow blood susugar. keketoacidosisis is a a serious s side effect ththat may leaead to deatht.
3:47 pm
a a rare life-e-threateninig babacterial ininfection inin the skin n of the pererim could ococcur. stopop taking fafarxiga and dl yoyour doctor r right awayy if you havave symptomsms of t this bactererial infectc, an allerergic reactition, or ketoacicidosis. farxigiga can helplp you kekeep living g life. asask your dococtor for fafara for chroninic kidney d diseas. if you can't afford your medication,n, astrazeneca may be able to help. ♪ farxiga ♪ [sneeze]e] (♪♪♪) astepro alallergy, steroioid free allllergy relif thatat starts woworking in 30 0 minutes, whwhile other r allergy sprarays take hohours. wiwith asteproro's unbeatataby fast allllergy relieief you u can asteprpro and go!! these hands used to hold me as a little girl. would comfort me. but now, they've become aggressive.
3:48 pm
this mouthth used to sing g me lullabibies. now, i it's unrecocognizable. if youour loved onone with alzheimemer's dementntia has becomeme agitated,d, it's n not their f fault. they c could have e agitation inin alzheimerer's dementit, which h can cause e behavior beyond t their contrtrol. help youour loved onone. learn n more at agitatioioninalz.comom. >> norah: some important news for americans with sleep apnea. philips, one of the biggest makers of cpap machines, has agreed to pay $479 million to compensate users. this follows and complaints that some of the machines for its beautiful homes into user's mouth. recalled millions of the devices more than two years ago, but as part of the settlement, it admits no wrongdoing. we talked to oprah winfrey about what is makaking so mamany peope
3:49 pm
unhappppy. ththat is next.t. she's beenen looking f for. sosotyktu is the firirst-of-its-s-kind, once-daiaily pill for modederate-to-sesevere plaqaque psoriasasis for the e chance at t clear or almost t clear skinin. it's like e the feelining of fininding your r back... isis back. or findiding psoriasasis can'n't deny thehe splendorr of thesese thighs. once-d-daily sotykyktu is pron to g get more pepeople cleaearer skin than thehe leading p pill. don't tatake if you'u're allerc to s sotyktu; seriouous reactionons can occ. sotyktu cacan lower yoyour abiy to figight infectitions inincluding tbtb. serious s infectionsns, cances includuding lymphohoma, mumuscle problblems, and changeges in certatain las have occccurred. tell y your doctoror if you he an i infection,, liver oror kidney prproblems, high tririglycerideses, or hadad a vaccinene or plan . sotyktktu is a tykyk2 inhibit. tyk2 i is part of the jakak family. it's's not knownwn if sotyktu has s the same r risks as jak inhnhibitors. fifind what plplaque psoriris has s been hidining. ask k your dermamatologist a t sosotyktu for r clearer sksk. so clelearly you. . sotyktu. [bones craracking]
3:50 pm
♪ ( (tense musisic) ♪ one aleve e works all l day so i i can keep p working my magicic. just o one aleve.. 12 houours of ununinterrupted painin relief. aleve. who do y you take itit for? (cat 1) friskies world! the purr-fect reminder that... life's more fun in the deep end. (cat 2) yeah! so never stop exploring... always keep it real... (cat 1) and do whatever floats your boat - just like we do. (vo) feed their fantasy. ♪friskies♪ (vo) you weren't made for moderate to severe crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis. but entyvio is. in clinical trials, entyvio helped many people achieve long-term relief and remission. infusion and serious allergic reactions can happen during or after treatment. entyvio may increase risk of infection, which can be serious. although unlikely, a risk of pml, a rare, serious, potentially fatal brain infection cannot be ruled out. tell your doctor if you have an infection, experience frequent infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. liver problems can occur.
3:51 pm
3:52 pm
>> norah: everybody wants to be happy, right? but achieving that isn't easy, especially in the age of social media. oprah winfrey teamed up with harvard professor arthur brooks for a new book titled "build the life you want: the art and science of getting happier." we spoke with them about the search for happiness. if you were an alien and landed on earth and specifically in america, and looked at social media, you would think that the way to happiness is money, fame, power, and good looks. >> yeah, social media is this laboratory for the earthly goals that actually make you miserable. >> everybody is looking at other people's social media, what they believed to be other people's lives, which is only a snapshot of other people's lives, and feeling envy about that. and one of the things that arthur and i talk about in this book is that envy is the great destroyer. >> norah: the happiness killer. >> it is the happiness killer.
3:53 pm
>> norah: to what is the secret to finding happiness? oprah and dr. brooks have a lot more to say on "cbs sunday morning." it's a good interview. tonight, cbs's steve hartman has the story of a life-changing moment in in a fast food drive-ththrough lanane. ththat is nextxt. our anceststor? i know w we have thehem. whenen i found t that immigrgrn recordrd on anceststry®, it just chchanged evereryth. i feelel like a titime travel. ♪ when modererate to s severe ulcecerative cols takes s you off cocourse. put it in n check withth rin, a once-daiaily pill. when i w wanted to s see results fafast, rinvoq delelivered rapid d symptom rerelief and d helped leaeave bathroom u urgency behehind. check. whwhen uc trieied to slow meme down... i i got lastining, steroidid-fre remissssion with r rinvoq. check. and whenen uc causeded damagege rinvoq cacame throughgh by visisibly repaiairing mymy colon linining. chcheck. rapid d symptom rerelief... laststing steroioid-free remissssion... ...and thehe chance toto viy repair t the cololon lining.
3:54 pm
check, c check, and d check. rinvoqoq can lowerer your abily to f fight infecections, includuding tb. serious s infectionsns and blooood clots, s some fa; cancers,s, includingng lympha and skinin cancer; death, h heart attacack, str, and tetears in thehe stoh or intestitines occurrrred. people 5 50 and oldeder wih atat least 1 h heart diseaee risk facactor haveve higher ririsks. don'n't take if f allergic to rinvoqq as sererious reactctions can n occur. tell y your doctoror if you e or mayay become prpregna. put ucuc in check k and keep it therere with rinvnvoq. ask yoyour gastroeoenterologt about t rinvoq and d learn how w abbvie cacan help youou save. your r record labebel is t taking off.f. but soso is your s sound engin. you u need to hihire. i i need indeeeed. indeed y you do. indeeded instant m match instay delivers q quality canandidats matctching your r job descriri. vivisit indeeded.com/hiree [sneeze]e] (♪♪♪) astepro alallergy, steroioid free allllergy relif thatat starts woworking in 30 0 minutes, whwhile other r allergy sprarays take hohours. wiwith asteproro's unbeatataby fast allllergy relieief you u can asteprpro and go!!
3:55 pm
[ sighs ] can't t sleep? just a lot on my mind. i can't t sleep eiththe. it onlnly gets touougher with . mom,m, what? well, , knowing prprogressiven prprotect yourur home, autu, and busineness should helelp you relalax. good, bebecause i cocould ue a gogood night's's sleep! me too. . d'yknow hohow eare chimimney sweep p gets up eveve? wait, isis this all l a d? why woululd jamie bebe in my ? i amam america's's biggest spokokesperson!! -debebatable. -i said d biggest! wewell, he's got you theher. for moms, from centrtrum. ♪ this new w mom ♪ ♪ h here i go ♪ ♪ i am ststrong anand brave i i know ♪ ♪ with a a little timime for m♪ ♪ no o doubt i will getet through ♪ ♪ lovoving me is s loving you♪ ♪♪ new from c centrum. ththe women's choice multivivitamin brarand. meet gold d bond healiling. a powerhououse lotionn that moioisturizes, , heals, anand smooths s dry skin.. with 7 moioisturizerss and 3 vivitamins, you can papay more but you cacan't get momo. goldld bond. champion y your skin..
3:56 pm
when m my doctor g gave me breztrtri for my c copd thinings changeded for me. brezeztri gave m me better brereathing, symptom imimprovement,t, and reduduced flare-e-ups. brezeztri won't t replace a rescue i inhaler fofor sudden b breathing p pro. it i is not for r asthma. tell youour doctor i if you e a heart t conditionn or higigh blood prpressure bebefore takining it. don't takeke breztri morere than presescribed. breztri i may increaease your r risk of thrhrush, pneumomonia, and o osteoporo. call youour doctor i if worsd brbreathing, c chest pain,, moututh or tongugue swelli, problelems urinatiting, vivision changnges, or e eye pain ococcur. ask yourur doctor ababout bre. >> norah: finally, tonight, the story of a man on a never-ending mission of kindness and how it is changing lives. here is cbs's steve hartman
3:57 pm
"on the road." >> reporter: at the bottom of a hole in chesterfield county, virginia, utility worker calvin godette is fixing a leaky water main. but no gusher down here compares to the fountain of good deeds he delivers up there. >> hi, welcome... >> reporter: whether buying coffee for the next car. >> take care of the people that are behind me. >> reporter: or groceries for a random shopper. >> i'm going to take care of this. >> reporter: calvin gives away about half of his income to total strangers but speak i'm going to fill it up. >> reporter: intern he may get a thank you, at best. but he remains undaunted. >> you never know. you could do something to somebody or talk to someone and you could change the whole situation. >> reporter: he says it happened once. >> you can come around, thank you. >> reporter: a few months ago, calvin was in this burger king drive-through when he happened to look in his rearview mirror and saw a woman who just seem sad, so calvin did what calvin does, bought her meal.
3:58 pm
only this time, his random act of kindness would not soon be forgotten. >> somebody to do something that nice for you on that very moment when i thought nothing could make me happy again, it just touched my heart. >> this is andy. >> reporter: denise walters had just lost her husband of 41 years. >> i just wish he was still here. >> reporter: and says calvin's kindness was exactly what she needed at exactly the right time. in fact, it had such a profound impact, she chased him down, told his boss, and got him recognized before the county board of supervisors. >> he saw that i was upset and showed compassion to a complete stranger. >> how are you doing? >> reporter: since then, they have stayed in touch and grow in their circle. >> nice to meet you. i'm chris. >> nice to meet you, chris. >> i told her you may have lost her husband, but you gained a family. >> he is just an amazing man. just an amazing man. >> reporter: he is also her
3:59 pm
new role model. >> i want you to have this. >> reporter: denise is now doing the same thing. >> he has shown me the way. >> reporter: so you feel like you are on a mission now? >> oh, absolutely. if you can do this, i can do this. >> reporter: and may be... >> can i have my hug? >> reporter: we can do this. >> go spread that joy somewhere, okay? thank you. >> reporter: steve hartman. "on the road." in chesterfield county, virginia. >> norah: let's all do it. spread some kindness. pay it forward. that's tonight's "cbs evening news." have a great weekend. good night. ♪ ♪ >> judge judy: so she had only had the car about 3 1/2 weeks. >> announcer: selling to a friend creates an enemy. >> judge judy: you want to tell me why you repossessed the car? >> she did tell me that she did make the payments, but that was inaccurate, your honor. >> announcer: did she expect a free ride? >> she called and canceled the payment. she reported it as a unauthorized transaction and called and had the payments canceled. >> judge judy: did you cancel
4:00 pm
the payments? >> i don't know what she's talking about. >> judge judy: [ mocking ] >> announcer: "judge judy." you are about to enter the courtroom you are about to enter the courtroom of judge judith sheindlin. captions paid for by cbs television distribution wynette freeman is suing her former friend, zahraw al-amin, for car payments she took over from zahraw, travel costs, and the return of property. >> byrd: order! all rise! shh. this is case number 21 on the calendar in the matter of freeman vs. al-amin. >> judge judy: thank you. >> byrd: you're welcome, judge. parties have been sworn in. you may be seated. folks, have a seat, please. >> judge judy: ms. al-amin, how do you know the plaintiff? >> she's a childhood friend. i grew up with her. >> judge judy: you had two cars... >> yes, ma'am. >> judge judy: ...and just one behind, and the one car that you had that you didn't want to use, you wanted someone to take over the payments on that car because you had gotten aew
121 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
KPIX (CBS)Uploaded by TV Archive on
